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Gini Graham Scott, Ph.D. - Professional Development

 and Conflict Resolution

 

Posts Tagged ‘Job’

March 26th, 2009

Make Your Workday Happier

Even if you don’t like your job, you can brighten up your day to enjoy your job more, and you may even find you like it, do a better job, and get promoted. These can also be a technique for conflict resolution.

Here are some ideas for what to do, drawn from workshops and interviews with managers and employees.

  • Do a relaxation exercise or meditate, so you focus on what you most like about your job. Make your visualization as vivid as possible, as you see yours participate in your favorite activities or interacting with your favorite people. You’ll feel more positive and upbeat.
  • Fix up your office or desk with fun objects that express you. They will brighten your day, and are great conversation starters, as well. For example, one popular bank manager showed Continue reading Make Your Workday Happier
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Posted March 26th, 2009 in Conflict Resolution, Professional Development By Keyboard Culture| No Comments »



March 24th, 2009

Gain Success with a Home Based Business

Setting up a home-based businesses is a good way to start a new business, especially in these recessionary times. In fact, as job lay-offs increase, so do home-based business start-ups. It’s still another form of professional development, which will give you additional skills, should you later look for a job. And you can always keep your home-based business on the side.

Here are some keys for starting such a business successfully.

  • Create a special work space for the business in your home, and make it clear this off limits for other uses. Then, when you get ready to go to work there, close the door and ask others not to interrupt you for non-work related except for emergencies, just like if you were in an office away from home. This way you really feel like you are at work.
  • Determine what materials you need for your office and have them readily available. To determine what you need, visualize what you will do everyday and make a list of what’s needed. If you have a limited budget, prioritize what you need and get what is most important first. To keep down costs, look for store specials and no-interest loans.
  • Check your e-mail every two or three hours, so you have large blocks of time available for doing your work. Advise people that if they need a quick response to call you; otherwise e-mail you. This way, you reduce distractions from phone calls and checking your e-mail too frequently, and gain a solid block of work time.
  • Allocate about 2-3 hours a day for Continue reading Gain Success with a Home Based Business
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Posted March 24th, 2009 in Home Based Business, Professional Development By Keyboard Culture| No Comments »



March 21st, 2009

Finding a Job When You Have One – Another Key to Your Professional Development

Given the shaky economy, you never know when your own job is at risk. So it can be a good idea to start looking for an alternative, just in case you are suddenly let go.

You are also better positioned to find a job if you have one, so even you don’t like your current job, it’s better to stay there while you look. Though make sure you conduct your job search discretely so others, especially your boss, don’t realize you are seeking an alternative. Consider this another approach to add to your professional development.

Here are some ways to look for a job while you are currently employed so you don’t get discovered.

• Don’t send e-mails about other jobs from your work computer, even on a break or before or after work. Someone could see your e-mails, such as your boss when monitoring the computers at work to see what employees are doing.

• Do use your own computer at home or use a personal laptop or portable for sending out e-mail queries during the day – preferably at a local café or coffee shop, so you don’t do this in your workplace.

• Don’t talk about your frustrations at work or your plans to get another job to other employees, even if you feel they can be trusted, since they might mention this to someone else and the word can get around.

• Limit the number of friends and associates you tell about your job search and only tell close friends you trust to maintain Continue reading Finding a Job When You Have One – Another Key to Your Professional Development

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Posted March 21st, 2009 in Professional Development By Keyboard Culture| No Comments »



March 6th, 2009

Join the Bartering Economy to Increase Your Income in the Money Economy

Bartering existed long before the money economy developed. It was a way to exchange products or services you had for products or services from someone else.

The growth of bartering seems to be inversely related to the growth of the money economy. So as people earn more money, they have less interest in bartering, and vice versa. That’s why during the early 1980s recession, many bartering clubs emerged, so people with reduced funds or work could have more buying power.

The way these clubs work is that the members offer their services or products for points; then others use their own points to purchase those services and products. A person can accumulate negative points to some degree if they purchase more producers and services than they sell. But then they have to earn more positive points in order to continue to buy something. The ideal is attaining a balance between what people offer and what they get from others. It’s like another money system which you can use when you aren’t earning as much as you have earned in the past from the regular economy.

Today, this seems like a good way to increase Continue reading Join the Bartering Economy to Increase Your Income in the Money Economy

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Posted March 6th, 2009 in Professional Development By Keyboard Culture| No Comments »



March 4th, 2009

Volunteer Your Way to a New Job and Increased Professional Development

At networking parties for the film industry and the unemployed – sometimes the same people in both groups — I have been running into a growing number of people who speak desperately about spending 30 or 40 hours a week sending out resumes and trying to set up interviews. But then, nothing. There are no jobs. So their job has become finding a job – though there are few jobs to be had at a time when layoffs are spreading from industry to industry. No wonder they are increasingly depressed.

Sometimes if you are faced with such a situation, the best approach is to give up a frustrating and fruitless job search for now. Instead, think about how you can volunteer to do something where the work is needed and where your skills and interests make this task a good fit. Volunteering is a good way to learn new skills and further your professional development, as well as keep you busy and fulfilled because you are making a contribution. Later you can use that experience to help you get a paying job – or get clients to pay you for using these skills on their behalf.

As example of the value of volunteering, I just read a People magazine article about Mary Marzano, 49, of Maplewood, New Jersey, whose sister’s home in Galveston was destroyed by Hurricane Ike. Mary discovered from a hotel-employee friend that the hotel threw out sheets and towels each month, so they could provide the guests with brand new linen. Realizing that the poor people in Galveston could use the sheets and towels, she began collecting them from some local hotels and shipping dozens of boxes of sheets to the stricken area. Then, she began sending these extra linens, along with donated quilts and bathrobes, to local charities and public services, including Goodwill, the Salvation Army, and some homeless shelters.

Though Mary has been doing this mission of good will on weekends, since she works as an advertising-account supervisor, you might do such volunteer work to build your professional development portfolio during the work week, when you are out of work with little hope of a paid job in sight.

So where should you volunteer? Continue reading Volunteer Your Way to a New Job and Increased Professional Development

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Posted March 4th, 2009 in Professional Development By Keyboard Culture| No Comments »





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